"I want to underscore the point that our ability, indeed any university's ability, to serve as a catalyst for economics development is directly dependent on our capacity to engage in basic inquiry and to expand the boundaries of fundamental knowledge about the world," Hitchcock said in testimony at the public hearing organized by the Committee's chairman, Sen. Kenneth P. LaValle (R-C, Port Jefferson).
It was the second hearing in a series by the Committee exploring ways for business and higher education to work together to promote economic development in the state.
Hitchcock said that the University is now "fully engaged on a broad front in the process of building partnerships for academic excellence and economic development." She pointed to Albany's departments of biological sciences and chemistry's work on gene expression, the Department of Physics' work in condensed matter physics, high energy ion beams and chemical vapor deposition, and the Department of Atmospheric Science's efforts in dealing with ozone depletion.
She said, however, that the state's investment in partnerships with the University and with industry, such as in the Center for Advanced Thin Film Technology, is a necessary "linchpin" of an effort that could eventually attract billion-dollar computer chip industries and create thousands of new jobs for the area.
Gov. George Pataki's proposed 1997-98 Budget cuts spending on the state's 13 CATs, including ones at Albany and RPI (whose CAT is in "automation, robotics, and manufacturing). Hitchcock told the joint Senate Finance Committee and Assembly Ways & Means members on Jan. 29 that the loss of state investment in the CAT could threaten the location of a $25 million research and development facility here by the Semiconductor Industry Association.
RPI CAT Director Harry E. Stephanou also spoke to the committee about the threat of his CAT's partnership with American Dixie Group, Inc., which had anticipated revenues of $7.5 million in the first year. Company President Clay Cooper told the Troy Record newspaper, "I'm absolutely shocked that the State of New York would discontinue the support of CAT. If the funding is discontinued ADG will be financially penalized."
Meanwhile SUNY Interim Chancellor John Ryan said that the Governor's proposal to increase SUNY tuition $400 next year to help off-set a $124 million cut in state aid would be "manageable," but not if a 20 percent cut in Tuition Assistance Program aid is also enacted. "If we have to increase fees, we can do so without jeopardizing access if we maintain the TAP."
And, William Scheuerman, president of United University Professionals, told lawmakers that some 3,000 university jobs could be lost through the governor's budget proposal if the tuition increase does not go through, and 1,200 jobs if it passes.
David Gilbert, the University's Director of Governmental Relations, said the University was pleased with a Senate Republican proposal for a "College Choices" program, which -- similar to a Democratic Assembly proposal last year --would create and state tax-exempt investment program for parents to pre-pay tuition for their children's higher education in a New York public college or university center.